Citation: 2003TCC215
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Date: 20030507
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Docket: 2002-1155(IT)G
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BETWEEN:
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CANADA TRUSTCO MORTGAGE COMPANY,
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Appellant,
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and
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HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
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Respondent.
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Miller J.
[1] This is a general anti-avoidance
rule (GAAR) case, in which I must determine whether a complex
arrangement entered into by the Canada Trustco Mortgage Company
("Canada Trust") in 1996 crosses the line from good
business planning to GAARable tax planning. There is no question
this was a good deal from the Appellant's perspective - the
question is: Was it an abusive deal from a Canadian tax
perspective? Was it a legitimate commercial financing transaction
planned to obtain the most effective tax treatment, or was it a
contrived purchase of a tax benefit wrapped up in commercial
trappings?
[2] With the help of the Royal Bank of
Canada ("RBC"), Canada Trust bought $120 million
worth of trailers from Transamerica Leasing Inc.
("TLI"). The trailers were circuitously leased back to
TLI. Canada Trust claimed approximately $31 million of
capital cost allowance ("CCA"). The Minister of
National Revenue ("the Minister") applied the GAAR to
deny the tax benefit arising from this CCA. I find the
transaction does not run afoul of GAAR because there has been no
misuse of the provisions of the Act or an abuse having
regard to the provisions of the Act read as a whole.
[3] In analyzing this transaction, I
will follow the process set forth in section 245 itself and
the approach favoured by the Federal Court of Appeal.[1]
1. Does the deferral of tax
constitute a tax benefit?
2. Can the arrangement which
resulted in the deferral reasonably be considered to have been
entered primarily for bona fide purposes, other than to
obtain the tax benefit?
3. Was there a misuse of provisions
of the Income Tax Act (the Act) or abuse of the
Act as a whole? This can be broken down into the following
questions:
(i) Does the GAAR legislation
capture a misuse or abuse of regulations under the
Act?
(ii) What is the clear and
unambiguous policy underlying the capital cost allowance (CCA)
treatment in the sale-leaseback arrangements of exempt
property?
(iii) Has there been a misuse or abuse
due to:
(a) there being no real cost
against which there can be a claim for CCA; or
(b) the transaction not being in the
context of a financing arrangement.
4. What are the reasonable
tax consequences to the Appellant in the circumstances to deny
the tax benefit?
Facts
[4] The parties provided an Agreed
Statement of Facts (Partial) and an Agreed Statements of Facts
Supplementary (Partial), along with supporting documents to those
agreed facts. The Appellant called one witness, Mr. Michael
Lough, the officer of the Appellant who recommended this
transaction to the Appellant's Board. The Respondent called
no witnesses but submitted, pursuant to section 30 of the
Canada Evidence Act, a business records affidavit of John
Tanter, a Vice-President of Royal Bank of Canada Europe
Limited (RBCEL). I will describe the relevant agreed facts before
dealing with the other evidence.
A.
Introduction
1. The Appellant was
at all material times a large diversified financial institution
carrying on business in Canada and a large corporation within the
meaning of the Income Tax Act (Canada) (the
"Act").
2. The Appellant was
at all material times a company subject to the Trusts and Loan
Companies Act and regulated in Canada by the Office of the
Superintendent of Financial Institutions ("OSFI").
3. At all material
times, the Appellant carried on business in Canada under the name
Canada Trust in combination with its subsidiaries, including The
Canada Trust Company. In an extract from the annual report of the
Appellant's parent corporation CT Financial Services the
operations and business of the Appellant are described as
follows:
... Canada Trust also holds a portfolio of loans and leases to
government agencies and large companies. Canada Trust does not
intend to make any significant increase in this class of
investment and since 1995, it has gradually reduced the size of
the existing portfolio. ...
B. Approval to enter
into said transactions
4. The transactions
that are the subject matter of this appeal resulted from
negotiations that were carried out by the Appellant and the other
parties over a period of several months leading to the execution
of a Term Sheet (the "Final Term Sheet") by the
Appellant and other parties.
5. The transactions
that are the subject matter of this appeal were entered into by
the Appellant after approval was granted first by the
Appellant's "Senior Credit Committee"
("SCC") and then by the Executive Committee of the
Appellant's Board of Directors ("Executive
Committee").
6. Appendix 1 is an
authentic copy of a schedule produced by the Appellant setting
out its investment in the lease, the return on that investment
and the tax and accounting consequences of the transactions that
are the subject matter of this appeal.
C. The Purchase
and Sale of the Equipment
7. The Appellant
entered into an equipment purchase agreement (the "Equipment
Purchase Agreement") dated December 17, 1996, in respect of
the purchase of certain equipment (the "Equipment")
from Transamerica Leasing Inc. ("TLI"), a corporation
resident in the United States of America, for a price of $120
million (CDN).
8. The parties are
agreed that the fair market value of the said Equipment was $120
million (CDN) at the material time.
9. The terms of the
Equipment Purchase Agreement provide, inter alia, that TLI
agrees to sell, transfer and assign to the Appellant, the
Appellant agrees to purchase of the Equipment absolutely (subject
to the Operating Leases as defined therein), and at closing
(December 17, 1996), a certificate of delivery, title to,
ownership of and risk of loss in and to the Equipment shall pass
from TLI to the Appellant.
D. TLI to hold
title documentation in trust for the Appellant
10. The Appellant entered into a
trust agreement (The "Trust Agreement") dated December
17, 1996 with TLI.
11. The terms of the Trust
Agreement provide, inter alia, that solely for
administrative convenience the Appellant appoints TLI as trustee
and agent of the Appellant to hold in TLI's name, for and on
behalf of the Appellant each Certificate of Title, Certificate of
Ownership, registration and like documentation in respect of the
Equipment.
E. Loan
to the Appellant
12. The total purchase price of
the Equipment was $120 million (CDN). In addition, the Appellant
incurred $2.34 (CDN) in related transaction costs.
13. Approximately $24.98 million
(CDN) of the Appellant's own funds were used to purchase the
Equipment.
14. The balance of the required
funds, approximately $97.35 million (CDN), was borrowed by the
Appellant from the Royal Bank of Canada ("RBC")
pursuant to the terms of a loan agreement (the "Loan
Agreement"), dated December 17, 1996 between the Appellant
and RBC (the "Loan").
15. The terms of the Loan
Agreement provide, inter alia, that:
(a) the interest
rate on the Loan was 7.5%; and
(b) the Appellant
is required to make semi-annual instalment payments of principal
and interest on the Loan to RBC as set out in "Schedule
2" to the Loan Agreement (the "Loan Instalment
Payments").
(c) The terms of
the Loan Agreement also provide that the Bank's recourse
against the Appellant is limited as described in
Article 4.2.
F.
Leasing of the Equipment to MAIL
16. The Appellant entered into a
lease agreement (the "Lease"), dated December 17, 1996,
to lease the Equipment to Maple Assets Investments Limited
('MAIL"), a limited liability company incorporated under
the laws of England.
17. The terms of the Lease
include the following:
(a) the term of
the Lease is for an initial period ending December 1, 2014;
(b) the Rent
Payments under the Lease are based upon an effective rate of
8.5%;
(c) MAIL, as
lessee, is required to make semi-annual payments to the Appellant
as lessor in the amounts set out in "Schedule C"
attached to the Lease (the "Rent Payments"); and
(d) MAIL is
provided with an option to purchase the Equipment (the
"Option Price") CDN $84 million being the First Option
Value on December 1, 2005 and another option exercisable at the
fair market value on December 1, 2014.
G. Sub-Lease of
the Equipment to TLI
18. MAIL entered into a
sub-lease agreement (the "Sub-Lease") dated December
17, 1996, to sub-lease the Equipment to TLI.
19. Most of the terms of the
Sub-Lease are similar to those found in the Lease. The Sub-Lease
provided TLI, as sub-lessee, purchase options similar to those
provided to MAIL under the Lease. One term in the Sub-Lease
which differs from the terms of the Lease is that the
Sub-Lessee was required to pre-pay to MAIL on the date of
closing all amounts that are or may become due under the
Sub-Lease.
H.
Co-ordination Agreement
20. The Appellant entered into a
co-ordination agreement (the "Co-ordination Agreement")
dated December 17, 1996 with TLI and MAIL.
I.
Non-Disturbance Undertaking
21. The Appellant gave a
non-disturbance undertaking, dated 17 December, 1996, relating to
the Lease, the Sub-Lease and the Co-ordination Agreement (the
"Non-Disturbance Undertaking").
J.
Security for the Lease and Loan
22. On or about December 17,
1996, TLI pre-paid its payment obligations under the Sub-Lease to
MAIL, in the approximate amount of $116.4 million (CDN) (the
"Pre-payment").
23. On or about December 17,
1996 MAIL applied the Pre-payment funds as follows:
(a) MAIL placed
on deposit with the RBC an amount equal to the Loan
(approximately $97.35 million (CDN) (the "Defeasance
Payment"); and
(b) MAIL paid the
balance of the Pre-payment (approximately $19 million) to Royal
Bank of Canada Trust Company (Jersey) as trustee of the Maple
Assets Charitable Trust ("RBC Jersey") on the condition
that RBC Jersey use these funds to purchase a Government of
Ontario bond (the "Bond"), maturing on the December 1,
2005.
24. The Appellant, MAIL and RBC
Jersey entered into a support agreement (the "Support
Agreement"), dated December 17, 1996. RBC Jersey, entered
into the Support Agreement in its capacity as trustee of the
Maple Assets Charitable Trust (the "Trust"). RBC Jersey
is a wholly owned subsidiary of RBC. Pursuant to the terms of the
Support Agreement, the Trust agreed to purchase the Bond and
agreed to pledge it as security in support of MAIL's
obligation to pay the Purchase Option Payments or the Termination
Values.
25. The Appellant, and RBC
Jersey, in its capacity as trustee of the Trust, entered into a
pledge agreement (the "RBC Pledge Agreement") dated
December 17, 1996. Pursuant to the terms of the RBC Pledge
Agreement, the Bond was pledged to the Appellant as security for
MAIL's obligations under the Lease.
26. The Appellant entered into a
security assignment (the "Security Assignment"), dated
December 17, 1996 with RBC.
27. Pursuant to the terms of the
Security Assignment, the Appellant provided RBC with an
assignment of the Rent Payments owed from MAIL, provided MAIL
with an irrevocable instruction to pay the assigned Rent Payments
to RBC and agreed that Rent Payments be applied by RBC to the
Loan Instalment Payments.
K. Other
Agreements
28. The Appellant entered into a
pledge agreement (the "MAIL Pledge Agreement") dated
December 17, 1996 with MAIL.
29. The Appellant entered into a
custodial agreement (the "Custodial Agreement") dated
December 17, 1996, with RBC Jersey, in its capacity as trustee of
the Trust, and Scotia McLeod Inc. as Custodian. Under the terms
of this agreement, the Custodian agrees to hold the Bond or
Replacement Bonds until the Bonds mature or are disposed of.
30. A management agreement dated
December 17, 1996 was entered into between MAIL, RBC Jersey and
Royal Bank of Canada Trust Corporation Limited, a company
incorporated under the laws of England (the "Management
Agreement"). Under the terms of the Agreement, RBCTC
undertook to manage and fulfil the affairs and obligations of
MAIL under the Transaction Documents and to provide the directors
and officers of MAIL.
31. A Guarantee dated December
18, 1996 was entered into between Transamerica Finance
Corporation (TFC) the parent corporation of TLI and MAIL (the
"TFC/MAIL Guarantee"), whereby Transamerica
unconditionally and irrevocably guarantees to MAIL the
performance of all of TLI's obligations under the
Co-ordination Agreement and the Sub-Lease Agreement.
32. A Guarantee dated December
18, 1996 was entered into between TFC and the Appellant (the
"TFC/Appellant Guarantee"). By the terms of this
Guarantee, TFC unconditionally and irrevocably guarantees all the
obligations owed by TLI to the Appellant under the Equipment
Purchase Agreement, the Co-ordination Agreement and the Trust
Agreement.
L. Tax
Reporting and assessments
33. In computing its income for
the 1996 and 1997 taxation years the Appellant reported leasing
income in the amounts of $48,920,847 and $51,787,114,
respectively.
34. In computing its income for
the 1996 and 1997 taxation years the Appellant deducted capital
cost allowance ("CCA") in respect of its leasing assets
in the amount of $36,214,174 and $46,365,889, respectively.
Pursuant to Regulation 1100(15) these capital cost allowance
claims were made only against the leasing income realized by the
Appellant in the particular years.
35. By way of a reassessment
dated October 18, 2002 the Minister reassessed the Appellant in
respect of its 1997 taxation year by denying it the class 10
CCA claim of $31,196,700. The Minister reassessed on the basis
that the Appellant had failed to acquire title to the equipment
and, in the alternative, that section 245 of the Income Tax
Act ("the GAAR") applied to deny the Appellant a
deduction for the said CCA. The Attorney General has since
abandoned the argument that the Appellant failed to obtain title
to the equipment and the sole ground on which Attorney General
seeks to sustain the reassessment is the GAAR. In reassessing,
the Minister did not assume as a fact, and the Attorney General
does not assert that:
· any of the
transactions in issue were a sham or were legally
ineffective;
· that the
fair market value of the equipment at the time of the purchase by
the Appellant was not $120 million;
· that, with
respect to the lease between the Appellant and MAIL, the rental
rate on the equipment was not a market rate; or
· that, with
respect to the loan from the Royal Bank, the rate of interest on
the loan was not a market rate.
Mr. Lough's evidence
[5] Mr. Lough was actively involved in
the negotiation and finalization of these transactions on behalf
of the Appellant. He testified that he had given the arranger,
Macquarie Corporate Finance (USA) Inc. ("Macquarie"),
the idea that the Appellant wanted a leasing transaction for $100
million. He stated that he had specified the type of equipment
(long-term assets easy to value, such as tractors or trailers),
the length of the term and the strength of the counterparty
sought. He did not stipulate that the Appellant had any need for
financing. The structure of the deal was left to the arranger.
Mr. Lough acknowledged the Appellant had engaged previously in a
similar structure to the one ultimately implemented. He further
acknowledged the type of assets sought was due to their good
after-tax return.
[6] Macquarie eventually found the
Transamerica Leasing Inc. deal, which did involve the financing
piece for the Appellant. Mr. Lough described the benefit of the
financial arrangement as improving the economics of the
transaction, by allowing the netting of the non-recourse loan
against the total value of the lease for purposes of financial
reporting on the balance sheet, which reduced the amount of
capital the Appellant was required by regulatory authorities to
hold, and also by relying on leveraged lease accounting to draw
income to the early part of the lease.
[7] Mr. Lough agreed that the
non-recourse financing modestly reduced the risk, although the
Appellant was comfortable with the financial strength of
TLI's parent. He testified that the non-recourse financing
had no effect on the equipment purchase or the lease.
[8] Mr. Lough was made aware of the
prepayment aspect of the transaction when Macquarie first made
the TLI proposal to the Appellant. He viewed this element as more
TLI's business than the Appellant's, as he stated it had
no impact on the economics of the deal to the Appellant. Mr.
Lough ran the deal through the Appellant's usual credit
approval process, including having the trailers appraised. This
led to the submission of a credit application to the Internal
Credit Committee, which in turn led to the production of the
Final Term Sheet. It was clear all steps in the transaction were
contemplated to be concluded and were concluded on one day in
December 1996.
[9] From a review of the Final Term
Sheet, Mr. Lough confirmed that:
(i) there were no ongoing lease
obligations from TLI after the prepayment, though there were
obligations with respect to indemnities, early terminations and
that sort of thing;
(ii) the deal could be unwound
if there were adverse changes affecting the Appellant;
(iii) the RBC recourse for the loan
payments was from the stream of lease payments due to the
Appellant and that those loan payments were equal to the lease
payments; and
(iv) the difference between the price
received by TLI for the trailers from the Appellant and the
prepayment of rent paid to Maple Assets Investments Limited
(MAIL) was 3.35 per cent of the trailer cost, which Mr. Lough
referred to as the net present value benefit.
[10] From a review of the credit
application, Mr. Lough confirmed that:
(i) subject to indemnities there
was no ongoing financial obligation of TLI;
(ii) risk of the inability of
MAIL to make the first option payment was mitigated by MAIL's
acquisition of a province of Ontario bond and the provision to
the Appellant of a security interest in the bond;
(iii) the net investment was initially
intended to be $24,985,541 which reduced over the first 2½
years and then went into a negative position; the projected $8.5
million income was accounted for over the initial 2½
year-period based on the leverage of the lease accounting
approach;
(iv) the lease payments and a portion
of the first option price would go to pay off the RBC loan;[2] the remainder of
the purchase option price would be covered by the bond and would
yield the $8.5 million before tax return on the Appellant's
approximate $25 million investment;[3]
(v) there were no ongoing schedule
payment obligations of TLI due to the prepayment it made and
therefore there were no credit risk to the lessee;
(vi) ownership of the trailers would
provide CCA of 30 per cent on a declining balance basis on the
purchase of the $120 million worth of equipment to shelter lease
income;
(vii) the transaction provided a shareholder
value added to tax capacity ratio of 25 per cent, which Mr. Lough
explained to mean the economic value added; basically it was an
effective transaction;
(viii) the Appellant would obtain an opinion that
it would be entitled to the CCA and that the lease investment met
all current Canadian tax regulations; and
(ix) the transaction should be
recommended as tax effective in utilizing the tax benefits to
offset unsheltered taxable lease income.
Mr. Lough's recommendation went to the Board of the
Appellant on similar terms.
[11] Mr. Lough briefly went over the
financial projection of the deal which is attached as Appendix
"A". In addressing the purpose of the transaction
Mr. Lough's evidence was as follows:
Q. Mr. Lough, why
did Canada Trust, or why did the appellant do the transactions
that are the subject matter of this litigation?
A. We did these
transactions as an investment to earn income for the Canada
Trust. It was, you know, we, as I had mentioned earlier, we had,
you know, a number of alternatives that my department looked at.
The lease portfolio had run off in recent years so we were
looking to do a lease in order to, you know, to maintain the
diversification between the various portfolios.
Q. Mr. Lough, how
did - did tax considerations enter into the decision to do this
transaction? And if they did, how?
A. You know,
certainly we looked at the after tax returns on this transaction
as we would on any sort of transaction.
[Transcript page 66 line 10 to page 67 line 1]
Other evidence
[12] Apart from the documentation of the
transaction itself introduced as evidence, the Appellant also
entered several follow-up correspondences between Alan Wheable,
Vice-President, Taxation, TD Bank Financial Group and the CCRA
representative Guy Alden. The gist of these communications is
that Canada Trust clarified with CCRA the role played by
regulatory capital requirements.[4] What is apparent from this evidence is that the
way the financing was structured, that is by the use of
non-recourse debt, significantly improved Canada Trust's
management of these requirements, though was of no economic
import to Canada Trust. This advantage to Canada Trust was as a
result of the net investment balance actively going negative (see
Appendix A, Column 11) - this was triggered by the substantial
CCA claimed.
[13] Finally, the Respondent produced a
Business Records Affidavit from John Tanter,[5] which attached the Transaction
Request - Structured Finance, created in the Structured Finance
Division of RBC London. This document refers to the facility
sought by the Appellant as a "Limited Recourse Cash Backed
Term Loan Facility as part of a Canadian Cross-Border Leveraged
Tax Lease". It was diagrammed as set out in Appendix
"B".[6]
The Transaction Request described the purpose of the facility as
follows:[7]
Purpose
TL is currently leasing Trailers to several End Users
(location not relevant since we are not taking risk on them)
through operating leases. To lower the financing costs TL will
sell the Trailers to CTM who depreciate the assets and claim the
Capital Allowances. CTM will finance the purchase using a
combination of debt and equity, with the interest on the debt
being tax deductible. CTM will lease the Trailers to a UK SPC,
who will on-lease it to TL. The benefit arising from the
allowances and deductibility of interest will be shared with TL
via the lease rentals. Since TL is the Seller as well as the
Sublessee, it can enhance the benefit even further by using the
money received from the sale of the Trailers to prepay its lease
rentals (ie it pays the present Value of the lease rentals). Part
of the prepayment of the lease rentals will be used as cash
collateral for the loan to CTM, thus eliminating the risk for the
lending bank but CTM will still be able to deduct the interest
costs.
[14] Later, in detailing the structure of
the transaction the Transaction Request states:[8]
To reduce the cost of funds for TL, TL wish to defease their
debt and to hedge its "equity" obligations to CTM by
way of buying a gov't of Ontario bond. In order to do this,
TL prepays its obligations to MAIL under the sub-lease,
which on day one is C$120MM less lease benefit of approx.
C$3.5 MM. MAIL, in turn, upon receiving the TL prepayment,
makes payment to RBC London of C$97.4MM to cover the debt
defeasance - and that obligation is then taken on by RBC -
and it also makes payment of C$19MM to MAIL for the equity
hedging.
Appellant's Position
(1) Tax Benefit
[15] The Appellant contends the concept of
tax benefit is comparative; that is, tax benefit compared to
what? In the Appellant's view, compared to a standard
sale-leaseback, which would have yielded the identical CCA
treatment. Therefore, there is no tax benefit.
(2) Purpose other than to obtain a
tax benefit
[16] Mr. Meghji's starting point in this
argument is that an ordinary sale-leaseback is not an
avoidance transaction. The differences between the ordinary
sale-leaseback and this transaction are the elements of the TLI
prepayment, the defeasance by MAIL and the RBC Limited recourse
financing. None of which, according to the Appellant, impact on
the tax treatment of this transaction versus the ordinary
sale-leaseback.
[17] The Appellant was in the business of
providing financing through lease transactions. This is evident
from the significant leasing income against which the Appellant
could use the CCA. The investment was analyzed as any other
investment, and was entered into for the purpose of earning
income. Indeed, the 8.5 per cent rate of return compared
favourably to returns on other types of investments. The limited
recourse feature of the debt had commercial benefits, which were
acknowledged by CCRA's representative. This was clear from
the communications between Mr. Alden, the CCRA representative and
Mr. Wheable, Vice-President. These communications do not
prove the tax motive, as the Respondent suggests, but a
commercial purpose derived in part from the tax treatment.
(3) Misuse or Abuse
(i) Applicability of GAAR to
Regulations
[18] As subsection 245(4) refers
specifically to a misuse of "the provisions of this
Act" it should not be interpreted to capture
Regulations. This view is supported by both the
Fredette v. The Queen[9] and Rousseau-Houle v. The Queen[10]
decisions. The alleged misuse in this case is of the
Regulations, not the legislation.
(ii) What is the clear and
unambiguous policy?
[19] The policy behind the leasing property
rules clearly sanctions the application of a loss generated by
claiming CCA in respect of one leased property against rental
income from another leased property. The specified leasing
property rules limit the amount of CCA available to a lessor of
property other than "exempt property". The policy
behind the "exempt property" list is that it applies to
certain types of property based on the attributes of the property
itself. By their very nature of being trailers, the equipment
qualifies as exempt property in the context of a leasing
arrangement. The leasing property and specified leasing property
rules provide a clear framework limiting a lessor's claim to
CCA.
[20] The Appellant provided a history of the
leasing property rules to assist with the identification of the
clear policy. In 1976, the leasing property rules
(Regulation 1100) were introduced to restrict CCA on
leasing property to be applied against leasing income. This
legislation was introduced in the following manner by the 1976
Budget Papers:[11]
While there is much leasing which is entered into for bona
fide commercial reasons, nevertheless there is need for a tax
rule to prevent unwarranted use of capital cost allowances. The
most direct approach would be to look through the form of leases
and distinguish between those which are in substance financing
arrangements designed to transfer the deductibility of capital
cost allowances, and those which are true leases in a more
conventional sense. However, past experience and further study
indicates that this approach is highly impractical, and that
there is need for a more general rule of a workable nature.
It is therefore proposed that with respect to all leases of
moveable property, the capital cost allowances thereon cannot be
used to create a loss to shelter non-leasing income. This
rule would apply to individuals and corporations. It would not
affect those taxpayers such as equipment dealers or manufacturers
who are allowed for tax purposes to treat moveable property held
for both sale or lease as inventory.
[21] The application of CCA from one leasing
property against rental income of another leasing property is
clearly sanctioned by the Regulations. This is exactly
what the Appellant did.
[22] The specified leasing property rules
were introduced in 1989, further restricting the amount of CCA
available in respect of "specified leasing property".
Leases of such property were recharacterized as a loan. Certain
properties were exempt from the specified leasing property rules.
Trailers designed for hauling freight were on the exempt list.
The 1989 Budget Supplementary Information stated:[12]
The new regime will not apply to assets which are commonly
leased for operational purposes and for which CCA reasonably
approximates actual depreciation. Based upon these
considerations, leases of computers, office equipment and
furniture having a value of up to $1 million each, residential
furniture and appliances, buildings, automobiles and light trucks
will be exempt from these rules. The rules will not, of course,
apply in respect of the licensing of films, video tapes, patents,
and other intangible properties.
The trailers in issue have the necessary attributes of
"exempt property".
[23] In 1991, the Government of Canada added
railway cars to the exempt list. Once added, it is implicit that
the Minister of Finance is of the view that the CCA rate
approximates economic depreciation.
[24] While the clear and unambiguous policy
behind the specified leasing property rules is to restrict the
CCA which a lessor may claim, the clear and unambiguous policy is
also that specified leasing property rules not apply to exempt
property. The policy behind the exempt property list is that it
applies to certain types of property based on the attributes of
the property itself.
(iii) Has the policy been misused
or abused?
(a) On the basis there is a
zero cost
[25] The Appellant rejects the
Respondent's position that there is a misuse or abuse because
the transaction resulted in the Appellant having no "real
cost" in respect of the trailers. The Appellant did have a
"real cost" of approximately $120 million. It is not
open to the Respondent to recharacterize a transaction and then
allege misuse or abuse based on the recharacterized transactions.
The question of misuse or abuse applies to the legal rights and
obligations that exist, not to a recharacterization of such
rights. Only after a misuse has been found can the transaction
then be recharacterized to determine the appropriate tax
consequences. The Appellant cites The Queen v. Canadian
Pacific Limited[13] in support of this proposition.
[26] In Canadian Pacific and in
Consumers' Gas Company Ltd. v. The Queen,[14] it is established
that cost in property, "real" or otherwise, does not
turn on economic burden, but upon what outlay was made for the
property. The Appellant also relies also on the comments of Le
Dain J. in Gelber v. The Queen:[15]
... In my opinion, the fact that a purchaser of property
provides, as a condition of the purchase, for a leaseback under
which he is assured of a revenue that will cover the amount of
his investment and some return on it does not make the purchase
price any less the true capital cost of the property. The degree
to which an investment is at risk is not, in the absence of a
provision in the Act or the regulations to that effect, a
valid criterion as to what is capital cost.
Similarly in Signum Communications Inc. v. The Queen[16] the
Court applied the decisions in Reed (H.M. Inspector of Taxes)
v. Young[17] and Gelber to hold that a limited
partner could claim a loss beyond his at-risk amount where no
statutory at-risk rules were applicable.
[27] The Appellant argues that Parliament
reacted to the case law, rejecting the premise that cost is
determined by extent of economic burden by introducing a number
of specific provisions to override the case law: limited
partnership-at-risk rules, tax shelter rules, limited recourse
debt rules, and computer software tax shelter rules. These do not
apply here.
(b) On the basis there is no
financing provided to the lessee
[28] The Appellant rejects the
Respondent's no-financing argument on the basis that the
policy identified by the Appellant is not couched in terms of
financing being an essential requirement of such a policy. Even
if financing were necessary to be in compliance with the policy,
financing was in this case provided to TLI. The Respondent's
position ignores the Appellant's perspective. What TLI
proceeds to do is just not relevant to the finding of whether
financing was provided. No policy requires that the vendor under
a sale-leaseback arrangement must use the proceeds in any
particular manner.
[29] The alleged misuse is directed at, in
this case, the lessor, so surely it is the lessor's
perspective which must be considered. But, even in considering
the lessee's viewpoint, the Appellant's position is that
the Appellant obtained financing. The factors that might suggest
no financing was provided, do not involve the lessor (for
example, the prepayment by the lessee), and consequently cannot
affect the CCA claim.
(4) Reasonable consequences
[30] There is no dispute that the
reassessment in issue arose because of the fact of the
prepayment, defeasance and the limited-recourse financing. The
Respondent has admitted that the purchase of the equipment and
the lease with MAIL are not objectionable per se. The
Appellant says that in order for the tax consequences to be
considered reasonable in the circumstances, there should be some
reasonable nexus between the abusive transactions and the
resulting tax consequences. The entitlement to the CCA claim
arose from the purchase of the equipment and the lease with MAIL
and not the purportedly abusive transactions. As such the
Appellant says that even if one were to accept the Minister's
theory of the misuse and/or abuse, the denial of the CCA or the
cost is not reasonable in the circumstances.
Respondent's Position
(1) Tax benefit
[31] The Respondent suggests that no
comparable is required to find that there is a tax benefit, in
this case, the benefit being the deferral of tax that arises by
nature of the deduction of CCA in the amount of $31,196,700 for
1997. And even if a comparable were required to determine the tax
benefit, the only comparable in this case would be no investment
at all; that is, the Appellant would not have bought trailers
without concurrently entering into the whole arrangement, which
provided the tax benefit without any ongoing risk.
(2) Purpose other than to obtain a
tax benefit
[32] Firstly, the Respondent maintains that
the whole arrangement, not just the acquisition of the trailers,
is an avoidance transaction. It is not appropriate to parse out
the separate elements of the arrangement. Neither the acquisition
nor the arrangement as a whole was undertaken primarily for a
bona fide reason other than to obtain the tax benefit.
There was nothing to this deal except the tax benefit. Relying on
an objective determination, by examining contemporaneous events,
this pre-ordained series of transactions was entered into
primarily for the purpose of obtaining the tax benefit and
sheltering other income.
[33] The Respondent relies on Mr.
Lough's report to the Credit Committee in which he refers to
the tax benefits generated by the transaction. This was further
supported by the summary for presentation to the Board, which
talked in terms of the sheltering of other taxable lease income.
This, the Respondent suggests, was in the context of a company
winding down its leasing operations, as stated in the
company's 1996 annual return. The Respondent also relies on
the RBC analysis which refers to a "tax lease".
[34] As the transaction presents no risk to
the Appellant, the Respondent maintains it lacks commerciality.
Also, the Respondent suggests a further lack of commerciality due
to the ability for the deal to be unwound if tax laws change to
adversely affect the Appellant.
[35] Further, the fact TLI could, after
closing the transaction, claim depreciation for accounting and US
tax purposes is significant.
(3) Misuse or Abuse
(i) Applicability of GAAR to
Regulations
[36] The Rousseau-Houle decision upon
which the Appellant relies is under appeal. The Respondent simply
disagrees with that decision. Many of the details of the CCA
scheme, while found in the Regulations are rooted in the
Act. Specifically, paragraph 18(1)(b) provides no
deduction shall be allowed for an amount on capital account
"except as expressly permitted by this Part." Also,
subsection 20(1) provides that:
20(1) Notwithstanding paragraphs
18(1)(a), (b) ... there may be deducted ...
(a) such part
of the capital cost to the taxpayer of property, or such amount
in respect of the capital cost to the taxpayer of property, if
any, as is allowed by regulation;
[37] GAAR specifically refers to an analysis
of the abuse "having regard to the provisions of this
Act ... read as a whole". The Regulations are
inextricably connected to the Act.
[38] Finally, relying upon the Supreme Court
of Canada decisions in Attorney General of Québec v.
Blaikie[18] and Leaf v. Governor General in
Council[19] the Respondent argues the Supreme Court of
Canada, outside the criminal context, has endorsed the
proposition that "Act" includes subordinate
legislation such as Regulations.
(ii) What is the clear and
unambiguous policy?
[39] The clear and unambiguous policy behind
CCA is to recognize the capital cost of assets consumed in a
taxpayer's business.
[40] Recognizing that leasing arrangements
afforded lower financing costs to lessees by transferring CCA
entitlement to a lessor, the government introduced the leasing
property rules to limit CCA to lessors to application against
their leasing income. As these arrangements continued to
proliferate the specified leasing property rules were introduced,
with the effect of treating payments under a lease as if they
were loan payments of principal and interest. Exceptions in the
form of exempt property were identified: these were assets
commonly leased for operational purposes and for which CCA
reasonably approximated depreciation.
[41] The Respondent cites the Department of
Finance Technical Notes of March 14, 1991, quoting the
Regulatory Impact Analysis Statement:[20]
In many cases, leasing constitutes a financing alternative to
conventional purchasing and borrowing. For taxpayers who are not
currently taxable, leasing may provide a form of after-tax
financing ... the tax advantages of leasing arise because the
capital cost allowance (CCA) for leased property may exceed
actual depreciation. In this situation, leasing allows a
non-taxpaying lessee to trade accelerated CCA which the lessee
cannot use to a taxpaying lessor in return for reduced rental
payments. For the lessor, the accelerated write-offs defer taxes
payable on other income - a benefit that can extend indefinitely
if the asset base of the lessor is expanding. While a lower cost
of financing can be achieved by leasing in these circumstances,
the savings are generated at the expense of government tax
revenues.
[42] Further, the April 27, 1989, Budget
Papers state:[21]
The government has made a number of changes to the Income
Tax Act over the last five years to curtail opportunities for
after-tax financing ... Consistent with these changes, the budget
proposes to alter the tax treatment of certain leases for the
purposes of the CCA provisions. These changes reduce the tax
advantages of leasing for taxpayers who are tax-exempt or who are
currently not taxable. The changes do not, however, alter the
relative treatment of leased assets and purchased assets where
there is no benefit from transferring deductions. In particular,
special rules are provided to ensure that the full benefit of
capital cost allowance remains available to taxpayers using the
leased property in the course of their businesses.
(iii) Has the policy been misused
or abused?
(a) On the basis there is a
zero cost
[43] The Respondent's position is that
the true economic substance in this case is that the Appellant
incurred no cost, and Parliament did not intend that a taxpayer
with no true cost be allowed to claim CCA. The prepayments in the
context of the non-recourse loan insured the Appellant had no
economic risk. Borrowed funds from RBC were returned the same
day, not used to acquire capital assets in an income-earning
process. Even the Appellant's equity funding was ultimately
covered by a province of Ontario bond.
[44] The Respondent relies on comments in
the Tax Court of Canada decisions of McNichol v. The Queen[22] and
RMM Canadian Enterprises Inc. et al v. The Queen[23] for the
proposition that the Court must look at "the effect of the
transaction viewed realistically".
(b) On the basis there was no
financing
[45] The policy underlying the specified
leasing property rules is to allow leasing to persist as an
alternative method of financing while limiting tax advantages of
doing so. The Respondent submits that the object and spirit of
the specified leasing property rules is to reduce the tax
advantage of leasing while continuing to allow lease financing to
acquire assets for operational purposes. No such financing was
provided in this case to bring the Appellant within this
context.
(4) Reasonable tax
consequences
[46] The Respondent proposes that the
reasonable tax consequences are as follows: Where the misuse and
abuse arise: (a) because the Appellant did not incur any real
cost, the Appellant should be taxed as if its cost for CCA
purposes is nil; or, alternatively, (b) because there was no
financing provided, the Appellant should be taxed as if the
specified leasing property rules apply with the result that no
CCA is available.
Analysis
[47] Section 245 of the Income Tax
Act reads in part as follows:
245(1) In this section,
"tax benefit" means a reduction, avoidance or deferral of tax
or other amount payable under this Act or an increase in a refund
of tax or other amount under this Act;
"tax consequences" to a person means the amount of income,
taxable income, or taxable income earned in Canada of, tax or
other amount payable by or refundable to the person under this
Act, or any other amount that is relevant for the purposes of
computing that amount;
"transaction" includes an arrangement or event.
(2) Where a
transaction is an avoidance transaction, the tax consequences to
a person shall be determined as is reasonable in the
circumstances in order to deny a tax benefit that, but for this
section, would result, directly or indirectly, from that
transaction or from a series of transactions that includes that
transaction.
(3) An avoidance
transaction means any transaction
(a) that, but
for this section, would result, directly or indirectly, in a tax
benefit, unless the transaction may reasonably be considered to
have been undertaken or arranged primarily for bona fide purposes
other than to obtain the tax benefit; or
(b) that is
part of a series of transactions, which series, but for this
section, would result, directly or indirectly, in a tax benefit,
unless the transaction may reasonably be considered to have been
undertaken or arranged primarily for bona fide purposes other
than to obtain the tax benefit.
(4) For greater
certainty, subsection (2) does not apply to a transaction where
it may reasonably be considered that the transaction would not
result directly or indirectly in a misuse of the provisions of
this Act or an abuse having regard to the provisions of this Act,
other than this section, read as a whole.
(5) Without
restricting the generality of subsection (2),
(a) any
deduction in computing income, taxable income, taxable income
earned in Canada or tax payable or any part thereof may be
allowed or disallowed in whole or in part,
(b) any such
deduction, any income, loss or other amount or part thereof may
be allocated to any person,
(c) the
nature of any payment or other amount may be recharacterized,
and
(d) the tax
effects that would otherwise result from the application of other
provisions of this Act may be ignored,
in determining the tax consequences to a person as is
reasonable in the circumstances in order to deny a tax benefit
that would, but for this section, result, directly or indirectly,
from an avoidance transaction.
[48] There has been ample written about this
most unique piece of legislation that no explanatory preamble is
required before heading down the analytical path recommended by
the Federal Court of Appeal in OSFC and Water's
Edge.
1. Does the deferral of
tax constitute a tax benefit?
[49] The legislation defines a tax benefit
as "a deferral of tax under the Act". It seems
clear that on the simplest construction of these words the
approximate $31 million CCA claimed by the Appellant in 1997
results in a tax deferral which would therefore be a tax benefit.
Yet, in tax laws nothing is apparently as simple as it appears.
One must read these words in a comparative sense argues
Mr. Meghji, relying on Judge Bonner's comments in the
McNichol and Canadian Pacific cases, and on
editorial comment of Mr. Harry Erlichman.[24]
[50] There may be cases which lend
themselves to a comparative analysis for purposes of clearly
identifying the tax benefit. But some transactions do not lend
themselves to such an approach. This is one of them. This is not
a case of a commercial venture whose very essence is readily
separable from any tax implications, which can be compared to a
like venture with tax implications then overlaid. The difficulty
with this transaction is that the tax is integral to the very
commerciality of the deal - there is no simple
tax-untainted transaction to compare to.
[51] I am not satisfied that the comparative
requirement is even a necessary part of the analysis of tax
benefit. In this case, it is acknowledged that the benefit, if
any, is a tax deferral. When you read the term "tax
deferral" (or even tax reduction) in the context in which it
is used (being subsection 245(3) of the Act), that section
then reads as follows: "An avoidance transaction means any
transaction ... that, but for this section, would result, ...in a
tax deferral".
[52] I suggest the logical interpretation of
this would be that the deferral (or reduction even) arises not in
comparison to some hard-to-establish normative transaction, but
in comparison to the taxpayer's position before the purported
avoidance transaction. Indeed, many reductions, deferrals or
avoidances will be tax benefits, but certainly not all are
avoidance transactions. The definition of tax benefit should not
be determined in a vacuum, but should be determined in the
context of the question of whether there is an avoidance
transaction. In this case, after the Appellant's transaction,
there has been a deferral of tax compared to prior to the
transaction. This leads to the question of the purpose behind the
transaction to determine whether it is indeed an avoidance
transaction.
2. Can the arrangement
which resulted in a deferral reasonably be considered to have
been entered primarily for bona fide purposes other than
to obtain the tax benefit?
[53] The distinction between the sort of
arrangement before me, and other arrangements that have been
subjected to GAAR, is that in a form of sale-leaseback
transaction, the CCA treatment is not extraneous to the
commercial venture, but intrinsic to it. A financial institution
which provides lease financing is aware of the specified leasing
property rules, and the ability to continue to receive generous
CCA treatment with respect to exempt property. This fact came
through loud and clear in Mr. Lough's recommendations to the
Credit Committee, and in the Final Term Sheet itself. This is not
a situation of tax treatment being applied, after the fact, to a
commercial transaction, but being inextricably caught up in the
commercial venture. It becomes difficult therefore to
disassociate the bona fide purpose of "other than to
obtain the tax benefit" from the purpose of obtaining the
tax benefit, in trying to determine which is the primary
purpose.
[54] The Respondent argues that this is not
difficult at all, because there are no competing purposes - there
is only one purpose - to obtain the tax benefit. Obviously it
will therefore be the primary purpose. The Appellant takes the
position that, while there may be a tax-motivated purpose, it was
incidental to the commercial purpose of engaging in the
Appellant's profitable business of lease financing, and more
specifically, to maintain some sort of diversification amongst
its investments. While I do not accept the Respondent's
contention that there was only one purpose, the tax purpose, I do
find that, on balance, these transactions cannot be viewed as
having been undertaken primarily for bona fide
purposes other than to obtain the tax benefit.
[55] In arguing this aspect of the case, Mr.
Meghji makes much of the contention that, had this been an
ordinary sale-leaseback, it would not have been offside. That may
be so, but not necessarily because it would not be viewed as an
avoidance transaction, but more, I would suggest, because it
would not be viewed as an abuse or misuse of provisions of the
Act. I am prepared to deal with the comparison between the
Appellant's transaction and an ordinary sale-leaseback,
but I believe it is more appropriate to do so in the debate
surrounding the object and spirit of the legislation. The
emphasis should shift from the tax benefit and avoidance
transaction argument, where the threshold is not particularly
high, to the misuse and abuse argument, where I believe the GAAR
emphasis should, in this particular case, be placed. In this
light, GAAR can be viewed as an endorsement of avoidance
transactions, an endorsement of the grand old Duke, except for
those transactions that clear the considerably higher abuse and
misuse hurdle.
[56] I return to the issue of purpose, and
why I find the Appellant's transaction is an avoidance
transaction. This will be brief. Mr. Lough made it clear to the
arranger from the outset that Canada Trust had approximately $100
million to be put out, and it sought exempt property investments.
Why? Because it had $51 million of leasing income that it
needed to shelter and only certain assets were still available to
provide that CCA shelter. Mr. Lough told the arranger that
trailers were on the list of the desirable assets, as they would
yield a good after-tax return. Granted, Mr. Lough also
testified that the investment was to earn income, maintain a
diversification between portfolios and enhance regulatory capital
requirements, but foremost was the ability to capture the CCA.
Indeed, I am satisfied the enhancement of the regulatory capital
requirements was achieved due to the effect of the CCA. [25] Mr. Lough's
recommendation to his Credit Committee confirms the dominance of
the tax benefit purpose:
Recommendation: This proposed trailer lease is a three-rated, tax
effective transaction involving hard assets which provides an
exceptional return on investment. There are very limited number
of transactions of this nature available in today's market.
CT currently has sufficient unsheltered taxable lease income to
fully utilise the tax benefits generated by this transaction.
And, further, in his recommendation to the Board:
The transaction provides very attractive returns, by
generating CCA deductions which can be used to shelter other
taxable lease income generated by Canada Trust.
Even the Appellant's own banker, RBC, referred to the
transaction in their Transaction Outline as a Canadian
Cross-Border Leveraged Tax Lease.
[57] I conclude that this was a profitable
investment in a commercial context, but such a finding does not
outweigh the primary purpose of obtaining the tax benefit from
the investment - the tax benefit drove the deal. Mr. Meghji
suggests that this approach could lead to his RRSP contribution
being considered an avoidance transaction - an absurd notion to
Mr. Meghji. Yet, I have no difficulty in imagining for example,
an RRSP contribution motivated solely by a one-year tax deferral.
Such a contribution could be viewed as an avoidance transaction.
Avoidance transaction is not a dirty word. The RRSP contribution
would most likely be saved however by the application of
subsection 245(4). Delving into the object and spirit of the RRSP
scheme is best left to another day.[26]
(3) Was there a misuse of
provisions of the Act or abuse of the Act as a
whole?
(i) Does the GAAR legislation
capture a misuse or abuse of Regulations under the
Income Tax Act?
[58] The Appellant relies on the position of
Archambault J. in the Rousseau-Houle case, which he relied
upon in the Fredette case, to the effect that, because
subsection 245(4) does not refer to the Act and
Regulations read as a whole, one cannot take account of
Regulations in applying GAAR. The Rousseau-Houle
case is under appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal. Given how I
am ultimately deciding this case, it is unnecessary for me to
engage in a lengthy analysis of this particular issue, which I am
reluctant to do, given the status of the Rousseau-Houle
case. Judge Archambault determined that firstly, it should only
be Parliamentarians through legislative policy, not the executive
through regulatory policy, that can yield as heavy a hammer as
GAAR to deny a taxpayer a tax benefit, and, secondly, that had
Parliament intended the legislation to apply to the
Regulations, it would have specifically stated such, as it
has done in other provisions of the Act. If I allow the
appeal solely on the basis that GAAR is not applicable to
Regulations, I run the risk that the Federal Court of
Appeal overturns Rousseau-Houle and likewise effectively
overrules my decision. I prefer proceeding on the basis that any
policies surrounding the availability of CCA stems from the
Act itself, as paragraph 20(1)(a) incorporates
Regulations in the legislation, and therefore the
misuse/abuse analysis is warranted in this case.
(ii) What is the clear and
unambiguous policy underlying the CCA treatment in the
sale-leaseback arrangements of exempt property?
[59] Both Justice Rothstein in OSFC
and Justice Noël in Water's Edge emphasized the
need for clarity in identifying the object and spirit of the
relevant provisions. As Justice Noël stated at page
7180:
[52] In so holding, I am giving section 245 a similar
application to that given by this Court in [OSFC] Holdings
Ltd. v. Canada [2001 DTC 5471] [2001] F.C.J. No. 1381; (leave
to appeal denied, June 20, 2002, [2001] S.C.C.A.
No. 522). But I wish to place particular emphasis on a key
aspect of that decision (paragraph 69) where Rothstein, J.A.
states that:
... to deny a tax benefit where there has been strict
compliance with the Act, on the grounds that the avoidance
transaction constitutes a misuse or abuse, requires that the
relevant policy be clear and unambiguous. The Court will proceed
cautiously in carrying out the unusual duty imposed upon it under
subsection 245(4). The Court must be confident that although
the words used by Parliament allow the avoidance transaction, the
policy of relevant provisions or the Act as a whole is
sufficiently clear that the Court may safely conclude that the
use made of the provision or provisions by the taxpayer
constituted a misuse or abuse.
In my view, this very particular threshold has been met in
this instance.
Framing the policy is critical. Both sides advised that the
provisions in issue have a clear policy behind them, yet framing
the policy has proven tricky. The Appellant states that the
object and spirit of the leasing policy rules is to limit CCA on
leasing property to profits from a leasing business. Further,
with respect to the specified leasing property rules, the policy
regarding trailers is that they are a type of property on a list
which exempts them from the application of the rules because of
the intrinsic nature of trailers. Because "legions of
columnists and lawyers and tax policy analysts", as Mr.
Meghji put it, drafted the exempt property list, the policy must
be that if the property is on the list, it receives the generous
CCA treatment.
[60] The Respondent frames the relevant CCA
policy in terms of providing for the recognition of money spent
to acquire qualifying assets to the extent they are consumed in
the income-earning process. The policy reason for the exemption
of certain property from the specified leasing property rules is
to exempt that property where CCA reasonably approximates
depreciation, but only in the context of a lease financing
arrangement.
[61] What neither party has addressed in
depth is the why behind their policy descriptions; or as Justice
Noël put it in Water's Edge, the "reason for
being" for these provisions. I know trailers are on an
exempt property list and that list was negotiated by many people,
but simply because it is on the list does not clarify what policy
the government is promoting. Is it part of a fiscal policy to
encourage growth by a form of borrowing? Is it part of a policy
to assist businesses who cannot use the CCA to obtain cheap
financing in exchange for transferring its CCA to an entity who
can use it? What are these leasing property and specified leasing
property rules really getting at? What indeed is the object and
spirit?
[62] There are two approaches to grappling
with these questions. One is to limit the policy quest to an
analytical review of the provisions alone. There may indeed be
some cases where the object and spirit of the provisions are
readily apparent on their face. Many however will not be. The
second approach is to conduct the same review by considering, as
well, any extrinsic evidence that sheds some light on the
legislators' rationale in adopting the provisions. I believe
following the latter approach has a greater likelihood of
success, though must be approached with some caution. What text
writers and tax commentators say is the government policy is
obviously not as edifying as what the government itself says;
what the government says after the fact is not as enlightening as
what the government says at the time of introduction of the
provisions. The object and spirit of the leasing property and
specified leasing property rules in the context of the general
CCA scheme are not crystal clear on their face.
[63] Justice Noël's review of the
object and spirit of the CCA scheme generally in Water's
Edge is a useful starting point for an understanding of the
more specific leasing and specified leasing property regime. Of
particular note are his following comments:
... There can be no doubt that the object and spirit of the
relevant provisions is to provide for the recognition of money
spent to acquire qualifying assets to the extent that they are
consumed in the income earning process under the Act.
Counsel's review of the legislative history was also
helpful, particularly in providing statements from the government
at the time amendments were introduced. The following is an
excerpt from the 1976 Budget Papers introducing the leasing
property rules:[27]
As explained above, the capital cost allowance for tax
purposes may often be larger in early years than the depreciation
recorded in financial statements and this timing difference is
generally useful in providing funds for capital investment.
However, the government's intention is that these faster
write-offs should be directed to the taxpayers most directly
carrying out the intended activity.
In some instances there are leasing arrangements under which
the use of capital cost allowances is effectively traded to
another taxpayer in exchange for lower financing costs. At the
individual level, high marginal rate taxpayers have thus been
able at an increasing rate to shelter personal income with
capital cost allowances on leasing of moveable property such as
equipment and aircraft. At the corporate level, there has been an
extremely rapid growth in recent years of transactions which in
substance are of a financial nature and yet in form are drawn up
as a lease in order to give the financing corporation the benefit
of deducting capital cost allowances which the person using the
property cannot utilize either because of tax exemption or lack
of taxable income.
While there is much leasing which is entered into for bona
fide commercial reasons, nevertheless there is need for a tax
rule to prevent unwarranted use of capital cost allowances. The
most direct approach would be to look through the form of leases
and distinguish between those which are in substance financing
arrangements designed to transfer the deductibility of capital
cost allowances, and those which are true leases in a more
conventional sense. However, past experience and further study
indicates that this approach is highly impractical, and that
there is need for a more general rule of a workable nature.
It is therefore proposed that with respect to all leases of
moveable property, the capital cost allowances thereon cannot be
used to create a loss to shelter non-leasing income. This
rule would apply to individuals and corporations. It would not
affect those taxpayers such as equipment dealers or manufacturers
who are allowed for tax purposes to treat moveable property held
for both sale or lease as inventory.
Transitionally, the limitation would apply to moveable
property acquired for leasing after May 25, 1976, except where
there is an existing contractual commitment. The capital cost
allowances on such property would be limited to the income from
leasing of all moveable property. The revenue effects of this
proposal will be minimal in the balance of the fiscal year
1976-77 since the capital cost allowances on moveable property
under existing lease contracts will not be affected.
[64] It is apparent the government was
interested in treating financing arrangements through the guise
of leases for what they were - financing arrangements, but wanted
some workable way of accomplishing this. The practical solution
was to deny the sheltering of non-leasing income, or put another
way, allow CCA in lease financing to a limited degree. Policy?
This is gleaned from the last paragraph which refers to the
revenue effect. The restriction on generous CCA entitlement is to
reduce sheltering and raise revenue.
[65] Leap ahead to 1989 and the following
extract from the 1989 Budget Papers:[28]
Leasing
In many cases, leasing constitutes a financing alternative to
conventional purchasing and borrowing. For taxpayers who are not
currently taxable, leasing may provide a form of after-tax
financing. The budget is proposing changes to leasing rules to
eliminate these after-tax financing advantages, while at the same
time not interfering with the availability of leasing for
operational and other non-tax reasons. This will be accomplished
by restricting the capital cost allowance deductible by a lessor
with respect to leased property.
The tax advantages of leasing arise because the capital cost
allowance (CCA) for leased property may exceed the actual
depreciation, particularly in the early years of a lease. In this
situation, leasing allows a non-taxpaying lessee to trade
accelerated CCA which it cannot use to a taxpaying lessor in
return for reduced rental payments. For the lessor, the
accelerated write-offs defer taxes payable on other income - a
benefit that can extend indefinitely if the asset base of the
lessor is expanding. While a lower cost of financing can be
achieved by leasing in these circumstances, the savings are
generated at the expense of government tax revenues.
The government has made a number of changes to the Income
Tax Act over the last five years to curtail opportunities for
after-tax financing ... Consistent with these changes, the budget
proposes to alter the tax treatment of certain leases for the
purposes of the CCA provisions. These changes reduce the tax
advantages of leasing for taxpayers who are tax-exempt or who are
currently not taxable. The changes do not, however, alter the
relative treatment of leased assets and purchased assets where
there is no benefit from transferring deductions. In particular,
special rules are provided to ensure that the full benefit of
capital cost allowance remains available to taxpayers using the
leased property in the course of their businesses.
Proposed Rules: Details
Under the proposed rules, a taxpayer who leases property,
other than exempt property, to another person for more
than one year will have the capital cost allowance on such
property restricted. The amount of capital cost allowance that
may be claimed in a year by a lessor in respect of leased
property will be limited to the amount that would have been a
repayment of principal had the lease been a loan and had the
rental payments been blended payments of principal and
interest.
[66] Further, the government's Technical
Notes with regards to these provisions read as follows:[29]
Alternatives Considered
These regulations, which result from the April 1989 budget
proposals, are part of a series of proposals over the last six
years to curtail opportunities for after-tax financing. For
example, the rules with respect to limited partnerships,
preferred shares and carve-outs have been amended to reduce the
tax advantages associated with such arrangements. These
regulations are consistent with the tax reform effort to reduce
tax preferences and broaden the tax base.
Anticipated Impact
These regulations, will restrict the CCA deductible by lessors
of specified leasing property in order to reduce the use of
leasing as an after-tax financing mechanism. The changes do not,
however, interfere with the availability of leasing for
operational and other non-tax reasons or alter the relative
treatment of leased assets and purchased assets where there is no
benefit from transferring deductions. For a more detailed
analysis, reference may be made to the budget documents presented
in the House of Commons on April 27, 1989.
[67] This suggests to me that the policy is
to simply broaden the tax base by restricting the sheltering
effect. Exempt property however is not captured. The reason cited
is because these are properties "commonly leased for
operational purposes or for which CCA reasonably approximates
actual depreciation". So, the policy does not extend to
these properties. Leases of such properties will continue to be
viewed as acceptable means of providing lower cost financing.
This seems not so much a matter of some greater economic policy
promoting sale-leasebacks of exempt property, though that may be
the effect, as the policy of broadening the base simply not
extending to such properties. There is no discussion of
encouraging the shipping sector; there is no discussion of
restricting the favourable treatment of lease financing of exempt
property to domestic borrowers. The explanatory government
publications are issued in the context of raising revenue by
restricting the sheltering of leasing income, except in those
lease-financing arrangements involving certain types of property.
And the rationale for the exception, from the materials provided
to me, is that such properties are exempt due to their nature of
being leased for operational purposes and for which CCA can
reasonably approximate actual depreciation, or in
Mr. Meghji's terms, because they are on the list.
Frankly, this is not so much a theory of object and spirit,
though it may be a policy. To attempt to delve more deeply to
find some greater purpose can only lead down a path of conjecture
and imagination - neither of which are appropriate pegs to hang
the policy hat on.[30]
[68] To summarize, I would adjust Justice
Noël's policy statement with respect to CCA cited
earlier to take into account the particularity of the leasing
property rules as they pertain to exempt property. The object and
spirit of the relevant provisions is to limit the generous CCA
treatment in lease financing arrangements to a recognition of
money invested to acquire property leased for operational
purposes, and for which CCA reasonably approximates actual
depreciation, to the extent that such property is consumed in an
income-earning process, such consumption limited to deductions
against leasing income. Unwieldy certainly, yet it captures the
spirit of the provisions as being restrictive, along with the
object of exempting certain types of property provided they are
acquired in a lease-financing context.
(3)(iii) Has there been a misuse or abuse?
(a) Due to there being no
real cost against which there can be a claim for CCA
[69] The Respondent's argument goes to
the requirement in the policy that there must be money invested.
The Respondent's position is simply there was no risk, there
was only a shuffling of paper, and consequently there was no
money spent or invested - no real economic cost. To accept the
Respondent's position would be to recharacterize the legal
form and substance of the transaction, for the purposes of then
determining whether there has been a misuse or abuse. The GAAR
provisions cannot be applied in that way.
[70] The first step in this review is to
determine what is the cost for tax purposes, GAAR aside. Is the
cost to be determined based on the notion of real economic costs?
Justice Le Dain stated in the Gelber case:[31]
... In my opinion, the fact that a purchaser of property
provides, as a condition of the purchase, for a leaseback under
which he is assured of a revenue that will cover the amount of
his investment and some return on it does not make the purchase
price any less the true capital cost of the property. The degree
to which an investment is at risk is not, in the absence of a
provision in the Act or the regulations to that effect, a
valid criterion as to what is capital cost.
I was referred to no subsequent judicial pronouncement that
overturns this finding. Indeed, though neither side raised the
recent Supreme Court of Canada decision in Singleton v.
R.,[32] it
confirmed that a true economic purpose test, in the context of
subparagraph 20(1)(c)(i) is not the correct legal test. In
unequivocal terms the Supreme Court of Canada relied upon Justice
McLachlin's statement in the Shell Canada Ltd. v. Canada[33] case
that:
... this Court has never held that the economic realities of a
situation can be used to recharacterize a taxpayer's bona
fide legal relationships. To the contrary, we have held that,
absent a specific provision of the Act to the contrary or
a finding that they are a sham, the taxpayer's legal
relationships must be respected in tax cases. ...
Second, it is well established in this Court's tax
jurisprudence that a searching inquiry for either the
"economic realities" of a particular transaction or the
general object and spirit of the provision at issue can never
supplant a court's duty to apply an unambiguous provision of
the Act to a taxpayer's transaction. Where the
provision at issue is clear and unambiguous, its terms must
simply be applied.
[71] It is noteworthy that the Supreme Court
of Canada states: "absent a specific provision ... to the
contrary ... legal relationships must be respected". There
are several specific provisions in the Act which do
require an investigation of the economics of the situation: the
limited partnership at risk rules, tax shelter rules, limited
recourse debt rules and computer software tax shelter rules.
There is no specific legislative provision requiring cost be
determined on any economic reality test for purposes of the
application of the Act's CCA regime in the context of
sale-leaseback-like arrangements.
[72] There is no uncertainty as to the legal
relationship arising on the acquisition by the Appellant of the
equipment. There was a payment of $120 million for the
equipment to TLI, partly with borrowed funds and partly with the
Appellant's own money. There is no evidence to suggest the
money was not paid. Likewise, the evidence is that the Appellant
became the owner of the equipment. It then leased the equipment
to MAIL. The documents reflecting these transactions are
excruciatingly meticulous.
[73] It is the legal cost which is
determinative, not the real economic cost. It is unnecessary for
me therefore to consider whether the Respondent is even correct
in its assessment that the real economic cost in this case is
zero. I will say though that in making the finding I have, it is
not to be implied that I accept the Respondent's assessment
on that point. I determine the cost is $120 million.
[74] The second step is to determine whether
GAAR can be applied to recharacterize the cost for purposes of
determining whether there has been a misuse or abuse. As I have
previously indicated, that would be a misapplication of GAAR.
[75] The Respondent relies on Judge
Bonner's statement in McNichol[34] as follows:
... It is evident from section 245 as a whole and paragraph
245(5)(c) in particular that the section is intended
inter alia to counteract transactions which do violence to
the Act by taking advantage of a divergence between the
effect of the transaction, viewed realistically, and what, having
regard only to the legal form appears to be the effect. For
purposes of section 245, the characterization of a transaction
cannot be taken to rest on form alone. I must therefore conclude
that section 245 of the Act applies to this
transaction.
and its endorsement from Associate Chief Judge Bowman in the
RMM decision:[35]
To what Bonner, J. has said I would add only this: the
Income Tax Act, read as a whole, envisages that a
distribution of corporate surplus to shareholders is to be taxed
as a payment of dividends. A form of transaction that is
otherwise devoid of any commercial objective, and that has as its
real purpose the extraction of corporate surplus and the
avoidance of the ordinary consequences of such a distribution, is
an abuse of the Act as a whole.
[76] The Respondent's interpretation of
these statements to the effect they lead to the proposition that
GAAR permits a recharacterization for purposes of determining a
misuse or abuse, is an overly enthusiastic reading. Judge Bonner
refers specifically to paragraph 245(5)(c) and also to the
effect of the transaction. It is worth repeating paragraph
245(5)(c) here as follows:
(5) Without
restricting the generality of subsection (2),
...
(c) the
nature of any payment or other amount may be recharacterized,
and
...
in determining the tax consequences to a person as is
reasonable in the circumstances in order to deny a tax benefit
that would, but for this section, result, directly or indirectly,
from an avoidance transaction.
So, yes, a recharacterization is permitted, but only at the
stage of determining the tax consequences, not at the stage of
determining the misuse or abuse. The effect of the transaction
must be related to the tax consequences, not to the determination
of an abuse.
[77] GAAR is not to be imposed lightly. It
should not permit a recharacterization of a transaction to find
the transaction is abusive in its recharacterized form. The
transaction must be viewed in its legal context and if found
abusive, only then recharacterized to determine the reasonable
tax consequences. That is how the GAAR provisions are set out: is
there a tax benefit, is there a primary purpose other than
obtaining that benefit, and does that avoidance transaction
result in an abuse or misuse? All those questions require a
review of the transaction, which is otherwise acceptable under
all other provisions of the Act; that is, the legal
transaction.
[78] Support for this conclusion is found in
the Canadian Pacific decision where Justice Sexton
stated:[36]
This does not mean a recharacterization cannot occur. A
recharacterization of a transaction is expressly permitted under
section 245, but only after it has been established that there
has been an avoidance transaction and that there would otherwise
be a misuse or abuse. A transaction cannot be portrayed as
something which it is not, nor can it be recharacterized in order
to make it an avoidance transaction.
[79] I reject the Respondent's zero-cost
argument. There was money invested of $120 million,
resulting in a cost of $120 million. No abuse or misuse has
arisen by claiming CCA on such cost.
(3)(iii)(b) Due to the
transaction not being in the context of a financing
arrangement
[80] Recalling the policy, it was cast in
terms of an underlying requirement that the transaction be a form
of financing. The Respondent's position is simply that the
transaction was not a means of providing financing to TLI,
because of how the money ultimately flowed. The Appellant's
position is that what TLI does with the money should not impact
on the finding that it received financing.
[81] This is unlike the zero-cost argument
as it is not a matter of recharacterizing the legalities of a
situation, but more a matter of characterizing the nature of the
transaction to begin with. There was some debate as to whose
perspective should be considered in addressing this issue - the
Appellant's or TLI's? I suggest the scrutiny should
extend to both and beyond. So, for example, how did other players
in the overall transaction view the deal?
[82] It is in this context that it is
appropriate to examine the normative comparable, which is the
ordinary sale-leaseback of exempt property. A
sale-leaseback of exempt property converts the seller's
capital asset into cash, while enabling the seller to retain
operational control over the asset, thanks to the lease. This is
a method of affording businesses the possibility of financing at
potentially more favourable rates than traditional lenders. This
form of financing falls within the scope of the policy. It is why
such sale-leasebacks are not subjected to GAAR.
[83] Is the transaction at issue before me
so significantly different? It is not. Looking at it first from
the Appellant's perspective, what was the deal? The Appellant
was in the business of putting money out. It was at the time the
largest operation of CT Financial Services Inc. It was registered
under and carried on business subject to the provisions of the
Insurance and Loan Companies Act. In its 1996 annual
return, under the heading "Loans", the following
description is given:[37]
Canada Trust holds a diversified portfolio of residential
mortgages and offers a wide range of consumer and small business
credit facilities, including MasterCard. Canada Trust also holds
a portfolio of loans and leases to government agencies and large
companies. Canada Trust does not intend to make any significant
increase in this class of investment and since 1995, it has
gradually reduced the size of the existing portfolio. Money
market operations invest funds in short term investments, manage
liquidity and maintain clearing balances with the Bank of
Canada.
[84] The Respondent emphasized the trend to
reduce lease investments, yet for purposes of identifying the
business the Appellant carried on, I do not conclude it was out
of the lease finance business altogether. Indeed, I find that the
Appellant was in the financing business - that is what it
did.
[85] According to Mr. Lough, the Appellant
sought an approximate $100 million lease investment - the
provision of $100 million of financing through the auspices of a
lease. And yes, he certainly wanted to make sure the equipment
was exempt property, as this would trigger the tax benefits
afforded by the Act. The tax did drive the deal, but it
was a financing deal. The Appellant was going to make a return on
it, better than many other forms of investments. The fact the
Appellant borrowed a significant amount from the Royal Bank to
extend the financing to TLI, does not change the nature of the
acquisition of the equipment from a financing arrangement to
something else. As Mr. Lough indicated, it impacted on the
Appellant's capital requirements, but had no effect on the
equipment purchased or leased.
[86] Similarly, from the Appellant's
perspective, what effect did TLI's use of the money have on
the nature of the deal as a financing deal? None. It ultimately
reduced risk, but a company in the financing business would be
expected to do what it could to reduce risk. That does not mean
it is out of the financing game. From the Appellant's
perspective, from the steps it took in analyzing this transaction
to running it by the Credit Committee and the Board of Directors,
to ultimately implementing it, the transaction is
indistinguishable from an ordinary sale-leaseback
vis-à-vis its characterization as a lease financing
arrangement.
[87] Turning to TLI's perspective, what
did it get? It got $120 million from which it met its full lease
obligation and pocketed approximately $3.6 million, which Mr.
Lough called TLI's net present value benefit. Just because it
had predetermined to prepay the lease, does not shift the nature
of the cash it received away from a form of financing: a
conversion of its assets into cash. No one from TLI gave evidence
as to whether any other options were explored as to how to use
its money. However helpful that might have been, there is still
the fact that TLI made the prepayment and that such was driven by
TLI, not by the Appellant. As TLI's decision, it is not a
stretch to presume it was in TLI's best economic interest to
do so. TLI obtained funds from the Appellant and proceeded to use
them in an economically viable manner. This does not suggest to
me that because that manner reduced the Appellant's risk in
the deal, that it loses the nature of financing.
[88] Finally, what were the views of others.
Most telling was the perspective of the Royal Bank. Firstly, it
refers to the deal in its Transactions Outline as a Canadian
Cross-Border Leverage Tax Lease. The use of "leverage"
and "lease" connote a lease financing arrangement. I
refer back to excerpts from the Transaction Request found in
paragraphs 12 and 13 and specifically point out the Royal
Bank's reference, under 'Purpose', to lowering
TLI's financing cost. It goes on to report that TLI
can enhance the benefit further by prepaying the lease rentals.
Obviously, the Royal Bank sees this as a good financial deal for
TLI. The Royal Bank reiterates this position in describing the
structure of the deal by again referring to reducing the cost of
funds for TLI. Certainly the Royal Bank views TLI as obtaining
financing.
[89] I find that the transaction is not so
dissimilar from an ordinary sale-leaseback as to take it
outside the object and spirit of the relevant provisions of the
Act. The policy applies to a lease financing arrangement,
and that is what we have here. All elements of the policy have
been met: lease financing arrangement, money invested,
acquisition of exempt property, consumption of such property in
an income earning process and limitation of CCA to leasing
income. I find there has been no misuse of the CCA provisions,
specifically in connection with leasing property and specified
leasing property rules.
[90] Is there an abuse of the provisions of
the Act read as a whole? What did Parliament intend by
"provisions of the Act read as a whole"? It
would quickly become an exercise in the absurd to attempt to
identify a clear and unambiguous policy of the Act as a
whole. It constitutes a plethora of policies, some perhaps
trumping others, some as broad as revenue generation, some very
specifically focussed and some even contradictory. In this case,
it is a specific element of the CCA scheme at issue. I have found
no misuse arises at that level. Justice Rothstein found no
misuse of a particular provision (subsection 18(13)) of the
Act in OSFC, yet went on to find there was an abuse
of a greater policy against trading in losses. I can draw no
parallel conclusion in the circumstances before me. As framed,
the policy already incorporates the more general policy of the
scheme of CCA. In effect, the analysis of the misuse of the
provisions and the analysis of the abuse having regard to the
provisions of the Act read as a whole are inseparable.
This arises due to the identification of the policy. I find there
is no abuse.
[91] What this analysis highlights is the
difficulty and risk in determining tax issues based on policy.
Certainly GAAR invites such an approach, and the Federal Court of
Appeal has made it clear that the only way to determine if there
has been a misuse or abuse is to start with the identification of
a clear and unambiguous policy. No clear and unambiguous policy -
no application of GAAR. But at what level do we seek policy? And,
as previously mentioned, do "policy", "object and
spirit" and "intended use" all mean the same
thing? Is there a policy behind each particular provision, a
policy behind a scheme involving several provisions, a policy
behind the Act itself? Is the policy fiscal? Is the policy
economic? Is the policy simply a regurgitation of the rules? Does
the identification of policy require a deeper delving into the
raison d'être of those rules? How deep do we
dig? The success or failure of the application of GAAR left to
the Court's finding of a clear and unambiguous policy
inevitably invites uncertainty. That is simply the nature of the
GAAR legislation in relying upon such terms as misuse and abuse.
As many have stated before, this is tax legislation to be applied
with utmost caution as it directs the Court to ascertain the
Government's intention and then rely on that ascertainment to
override legislation. This is quite a different kettle of fish
from the accepted approach to statutory interpretation where
policy might be sought to assist in understanding legislation.
Under GAAR, policy can displace the legislation.
[92] On balance I have not been convinced
this transaction flies in the face of the object and spirit of
the legislation. There is no misuse or abuse. Given my findings
it is unnecessary to address the issue of the reasonable
consequences that should flow to deny the tax benefit.
Conclusion
[93] The Appellant derived a tax benefit in
the form of a deferral in a transaction undertaken primarily to
obtain that benefit - an avoidance transaction. As much as the
Respondent may not like the end economic result, the
Appellant's capturing of the tax benefit in this instance
does not run afoul of a Goverment policy to allow CCA on exempt
property acquired by a purchaser, where the purchaser/lessor has
provided financing to the vendor/lessee. This is one of those
paradoxes where the sheer complexity of the series of
transactions involving many players tweaks the nose upward on
that least scientific of analysis known, in tax vernacular, as
the smell test, yet legislation and case precedent guide analysis
down a more structured and deliberate path past the olfactory
sense and into the more certain realm of reason, though less
precise purview of policy, where the GAAR debate, in this case,
rages. In following that approach, I have concluded this
avoidance transaction is not subject to GAAR, and on that basis I
refer the matter back to the Minister for reconsideration and
reassessment. Costs to the Appellant.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, this 7th day of May, 2003.
J.T.C.C.